No Hate Speech Movement

About our SID activities

We are awaiting an update on this SID Supporter's plans for Safer Internet Day 2019. In the meantime, please see information on its previous SID celebrations below...

The National campaigns and European partners of the No Hate Speech Movement (NHSM) each year support Safer Internet Day to promote human rights education and empower young people to speak up for human rights and dignity online.

We are also supporting the Thunderclap action of Safer Internet Day and share information on national actions during the preparatory period. We will cooperate with the main organiser closely by sharing each other's content.

The NHSM national campaigns will also organise events for 6 February 2018, including:

Run a Human Rights Education activity from Bookmarks, or other manuals of the Council of Europe including Compass, Compasite, Mirrors, Gender matters.

Hold a meeting or organise an event with regional or national representatives to discuss how to strengthen Education for Democratic Citizenship and Human Rights Education.

Events to raise awareness of national mechanisms available to children and youth to report cyberbullying, hate speech and hate crime.

What we are doing to support the SID 2018 theme of "Create, connect and share respect: A better internet starts with you"…

The No Hate Speech Movement mobilises young people to promote democracy and human rights online. The manual Bookmarks on combatting hate speech through human rights education has been a valuable tool for educators and youth workers to support young people in their efforts to denounce hate speech and make internet a better space for all. The manual We CAN!, presents communicative and educational approaches and tools for youth and other human rights activists to develop their own counter and alternative narratives to hate speech.

6 February 2018 is an opportunity for the NHSM to highlight the role of Human Rights Education in combatting hate speech and building a shared democratic culture online. Good practices can show how education mobilises children and youth to:

report cyberbullying and dangerous forms of hate speech that incite to violence and breach national legislation protecting human dignity.

promote alternatives, providing young people with different viewpoints, encouraging them to promote human rights and democratic culture online.

About us

The No Hate Speech Movement (NHSM) mobilises young people to act on hate speech and counter it by promoting human rights and democratic values both online and offline. The campaign's approach relies on Human Rights Education and the work of 45 "National campaign committees" and many "online youth activists" across Europe and beyond to raise awareness and support youth to respond to hate speech.

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